Dave Bartholomew, credited by many with creating early rock ‘n roll in his work with Fats Domino, has died at age 100 at East Jefferson General Hospital in New Orleans, his son said. He was 100 years old.
A member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,
the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame,
Bartholomew was a trumpeter, producer, arranger, songwriter, and
bandleader. He was the longtime collaborator of Fats Domino, helping him
write, arrange and perform some of the nation’s biggest hits back in
the 1950’s and 60’s.
He was a key behind the scenes man at Cosimo
Matassa’s J&M Recording Studio, matching musicians and producing
some of New Orleans most memorable music by artists including Smiley
Lewis, Snooks Eaglin, Little Sonny Jones, Pee Wee Crayton, Shirley and
Lee, Frankie Ford and Sugarboy Crawford.
Bartholomew nurtured
Domino’s career, letting him sit-in with his band when Domino was just a
teenager. He invited Lew Chudd, the owner of Imperial Records, to hear
Domino in a club on North Rampart Street. Chudd was impressed and signed
him to a contract.
The first Domino song, a version of Junker
Blues that was renamed “The Fat Man,” marked the first collaboration
with Bartholomew. It was considered a landmark in New Orleans music, a
meld of jump blues and rhythm-heavy style that was made for dancing. The two went on to produce such hits as “I’m Walkin’,” “Blue Monday,” “I Hear You Knocking” and “Whole Lotta Lovin’.”
In an interview with the Times-Picayune newspaper, the two discussed their musical collaboration.
“Actually,
we never sat down to write anything,” Bartholomew said. “He and I just
played. If we started a song and we got lost … I remember one time on
‘‘I’m in Love Again,’ we went outside and somebody said, ‘Don’t let the
dog bite you.’ So we come back and put that in the song. We always had
an awful lot of rhythm in our world, plus the blues, and New Orleans
being known for its second-line, we considered that, too. With that, and
what we added to it, we were very lucky. It went over big.”
Bartholomew was born in Edgard, Louisiana on Christmas Eve in 1918. He
played in bands led by Papa Celestin, Fats Pichon and Joe Robichaux
until joining the Army in World War II, where he was a member of the
196th Army Ground Forces Band. After working at Imperial Records
as a talent scout, he also helped such labels as Decca, King and
Specialty discovered the New Orleans sound. He wrote and recorded “My
Ding-a-Ling,” which became a hit for Chuck Berry, and he produced Lloyd
Price’s recording of “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” which Price had written, with
Domino, uncredited, playing piano.He also worked for Trumpet Records and Mercury Records, before establishing his
own label, Broadmoor Records, in 1967.
Survivors
include his wife, Rhea Bartholomew; five sons, Dave Jr., Don, Ron and
Darrell Bartholomew, and Alvin LeBeau, all of New Orleans; three
daughters, Deborah Hubbard and Diane Wilson, both of New Orleans; and
Jacqueline Temple of Atlanta; and grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
No memorial plans have yet been announced.